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[´cæf-fo-lo-´je]· · - A word designed to describe the knowledge about coffee SPECIAL EDITION FOR MAROMAS PARTNERS CAFFOLOGY© Contents Coffee is … 4 Botanical characteristics and typical properties 6 Coffee harvesting and processing 8 Coffee history 10 Blending and roasting 12 Coffee extraction methods 13 Welcome to the practical coffee world 16 The sacred rules of grinding 18 Espresso machine technology 19 Preparing an espresso 22 Perfect milk froth with ease 24 Classic and trendy espresso coffee beverages 26 Espressum 34 3 COFFEE IS… …one of the most regular, but yet also the most pas- different regions of the world and most especially sionate and romanced products of our daily life. with our green coffee buyers and roast masters, Whilst some people will consume it without much but also continues with our international distri- thought, others are very particular about their bution partners and their marketing and sales staff coffee and in the end all of us like it to taste good. and the training personnel, baristas and waiters The quality factor of raw ingredients, the blending who will serve that final cup of excellent coffee. and roasting are of utmost importance to all of us. Only when this passion passes through this For us at Maromas making and drinking coffee is entire supply chain can Premium Quality Coffee pure passion. This starts with our coffee farmers in be achieved. 4 All the wisdom and technology employed in the For this reason we have compiled this basic cultivation and preparation of coffee are vast fields Caffology lecture as a rather short, but yet concise and each can take a life time of studying. That is and easy to read manual covering the most impor- obviously of no use for those professionals who are tant aspects of coffee. In this manual we cover following in the chain after the coffee has been mainly the Italian originated espresso brewing tech- roasted. But it should be important for all those con- nology with manual equipment that has then in cerned to have some correct basic understanding international use and practice been further deve- about the product itself, as well as appropriate skill loped. We also examine different cups sizes, drinks, and competence needed in the preparation of basic tastes and the use of more contemporary fully coffee drinks. automatic machines. This profound manual is in- tended to give you some basic understanding of the coffee plants, coffee processing and coffee history. After careful study and some practice it will award you the basics of espresso preparation skills and it will explain and teach you the most important tech- niques for brewing espresso coffee and the prepa- ration of cappuccino and related coffee drinks. Wishing you pleasant reading and success in application, Markus J.M. Bihler Chairman Maromas Group 5 BOTANICAL CHARACTERISTICS AND TYPICAL PROPERTIES Botanically the coffee tree or coffee bush belongs average maturing period into cherry resembling to the family of Rubiaceae and grows uncultivated fruits and are therefore called coffee cherries. These up to about 15 meters high. For reasons of easier fruits are first green before then turning yellowish harvesting it is in plantations usually cut to a height and each fruit usually contains two seeds, the actual of about 3 meters and therefore also called coffee coffee beans. The coffee cherries turn bright red bush. when they are fully matured and ready to be It has thick and dark green, rubbery leaves on a picked. Out of the great variety of the plant cate- short stem. The blossoms grow in clusters and wilt gory Coffea, only two have actually significance for within hours. They then turn in 8 to 10 month of agricultural use. 6 One of them is Coffea "Arabica" that supplies about 60% of the world coffee production, and Coffea Canephora, usually called "Robusta", that contribu- tes about 40% to the total global production. The Arabica bean with an oval form and a slightly curved cut is very climate sensitive. It grows best in average temperatures ranging from 13 to 32 degrees Celsius and altitudes between 700 and 1.100 meters. That's why Arabica is also often referred to as high- grown or highland coffee. The main producing areas are countries in Central and South America, East Africa, India and Indonesia. The caffeine content in Arabica is lower than in Ro- busta. The sophisticated flavours vary in parameters Robusta beans with their heartier trees are not as of fine and noble nuances of acidity with a full body climate sensitive and are usually grown in lower and a slightly exotic taste that is reminiscent of a altitudes in West Africa and Far East. These condi- hint of chocolate. The crema of Arabica has typically tions lend to more economical cultivation, resulting a deep red-brown colour. in lower average market prices. But there are also The species of Robusta was only discovered about exquisite quality Robusta crops that achieve prices 150 years ago in Uganda, near Lake Victoria. It diffe- well above some Arabica crops. Robusta beans are rentiates from Arabica by its more round shape and stronger and fuller bodied than Arabica beans, a straight cut. exhibiting a warm grey-brown crema. 7 COFFEE HARVESTING AND PROCESSING For high quality coffee only fully matured cherries are hand picked. Since the cherries do not all ripe evenly and do not reach their final maturity at the same time, this selective picking is repeated every 8 to 10 days until all fruits have been gathered. In the traditional "dry processing" the coffee cherries are spread on large drying surfaces out in the open and let the sun dry them. During the drying process the cherries must be constantly and carefully turned around. This will take between 3 to 5 weeks, depending on climate conditions. A modern method is the "wet processing" where for high quality coffee preferably spring water will be used to wash off dirt and unwanted particles and channel the cherries into a machine called "pulper" that will squeeze the beans out of the soft fleshy part of the fruit and separate them. Then the water carries the beans through channels into a fermen- ting tank where the coffee contained enzymes start a fermentation process that takes (depending on the present conditions) from about 12 to 36 hours and will eventually free the beans from all the residual mucilage. 8 After the fermentation the beans get a good rinse and then go onto the "patios" for drying in the sun, although in modern processing sometimes hot air blowers will be used to speed up the process. After dry processing the dried pulp and the residual skin, after wet processing only the residual skin must be peeled off, this is done with machines that apply a light pressure or agitate the dry beans in a kind of tumbler. During all processing stages the beans are continu- ally sorted and separated from residual particles, but after this last stage the beans are then finally sorted according to size and color, either manually or with mechanical or electronic equipment and packed in sacks or large quantities in containers for their journey to the roasting plants. 9 COFFEE HISTORY The history and development of the beverage that we know today as coffee is interwoven with myths, chance, coincidence, trade, political intrigue and the pursuit of wealth and power. Coffee use can be traced at least to as early as the ninth century, when it appeared in the highlands of Ethiopia. From there, coffee spread to Egypt and Yemen. It was in Arabia that coffee beans were first roasted and brewed, similar to how it is done today. In 1582 the German Medicus Leonhart Rauwolf described the coffee plant, as well as coffee as the drink and its effects in the oldest known European coffee document – his travel reports from Aleppo. That was followed by the Italian doctor and bota- nist Prospero Alpini who published in 1592 his "De Plantis Aegypti Liber" in Venice, describing coffee from his travels to Egypt. By the 16th century coffee had reached practically all of the Middle East, Persia, Turkey and Southeast Europe. 10 In the year 1554 the two traders, Hakim from Aleppo (which could actually have been an ancestor of Dr. Massimo Hakim, CEO of Maromas L.L.C. Dubai, whose family originates from Aleppo) and Dschems from Damascus, founded the first coffee house on European soil in Constantinople. In 1645 the first coffee house in Italy opened at the Piazza San Marco in Venice. The thriving trade between Venice and North Africa, Egypt, and the Middle East brought many goods, including coffee, to the Venetian port. At the same time other important trade and port cities such as London, Amsterdam, Hamburg, Bremen and Marseille deve- loped into important coffee trading centers. The first exports of Indonesian coffee from Java to The Dutch were among the first to import coffee on the Netherlands occurred in 1711. Through the a large scale, and also to defy the Arab prohibition activities of the British East India Company, coffee on the exportation of plants or unroasted seeds became popular in England as well. It was intro- when Pieter van den Broeck smuggled seedlings duced in France in 1657 and in Austria and Poland from Aden into Europe in 1616. The Dutch later grew after the 1683 Battle of Vienna, when coffee was the crop in Java and Ceylon. captured from supplies of the defeated Turks. 11 BLENDING AND ROASTING When coffee beans leave the plantations, they are Coffee contains about 1000 substances of which known as green coffee until the time they reach about 800 are flavor components.
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